Top Banner
BoOK 1. the latter pmt of the next paragrph.]) Also An empty, a mcant, a void, or an no~ cupied, pace. (XKL. ee [s o . ) [In the present day, it is often applied to A clot to whic on nrtirefor privacy; and particularly to a cell for religiou retirement: and is vulgarly pro- nounced 4L.] You ay, oa Ui --- ` (°) or , i p. t.~- (g) [He hada ameeting, or an intrview, witl him in a wacant place, or a place unoccupied by others, i. e., in a private place]. Also EacA of the two sharp sides or edges of an arrow-head (Aon, JK, TA) or of a spear-head: (Agn, TA :) both together are called the 5;.;; (Aln, JK, TA.) g is primarily an inf. n. (MF, TA. [See 1, first sentence.]) -[Then it is used as an epithet, syn. with JIA:] ee Qa., in five places.l Then it i used (as a subbt. ib the sense of vacant place [in a general ene]: (MF,TA:) or a place in which i afotAing: ($, ]:) [often applied in the present day to; any opm tract of country or desert:] and then, particuarly, such as one take for the p~ s qf satig a want of nature; (MF, TA;) i. q. U, (C, Mhb,,) but not aJ meaning only a place for the perform- ance of .~ 1, as might be imagined from this explanation: pl. asl. (MF, TA.) It is said in a prov., (S,Meyd,) St;.i J ,Ji; ,j.d, (u , Meyd, g,) [in Freytag's Arab. Prov., (i. 436,) JAtt4,] i. c. [Thy place of retirement is] mot pre~rative (.)f) [of tAy se of shame, or modesty]; meaning it is most fit for thee to be alone in thine abode; (s,* Meyd;) for he who is so needs not to be careful for his shame, or modesty: it is used in blaming the mixing with others. (Meyd.) ; - -. _ [His place of retirement for satisfying o want of nature was straitened to himn] is used as meaning he suffered suppression of the feces, or constipation of the bowel. (Ibn-Buzurj, TA in art. em..) m t fA~JI '1, (TA,) or [as written in a verse in which it occurs in the TA in the present art., and in art. I rJ] .JI, (JK, TA,) [without,., but whether this be the right reading, or only re- quired by poetice license, seems to be doubtful,] is a phrase mentioned by Th, (TA,) meaning Verily Ae is good in speech. (JK, TA. [If the former reading be right, the meaning may be similar to that of tjL>1 _, mentioned above: if the latter only, or rather l ,.J 1 J1, be right, it probably belongs to art. kl, and is tropical, from the herbage termed lib.; and this may also be the cue if the former reading be right]) Igd; and its fem. m.: ee J1i., in twelve place. -The fem., also signifies applied to a she-camel, (?, Mlb,) Loosed from the cord, or rope, with which her fore shanh and her arm hatm ben bound together, (?, Mqb, j,) and ft alo, or free, (Q,) so that he patures where the will. (Mqb.) Hence, (Mqb,) it is used by way of metonymy a meaning Divorced: (L4, C, M,b, ] :) one sys to a woman, h ou; To art di;orced; (Lb, ;) and thu a man used to say in the Time of Ignorance: (TA:) and one says, s. ' She is divorced: (Mb :) and a woman is divorced thereby when divorce is meant (Lb, TA.) Applied to a woman, it signifies also Free from any obstacle to marriage: pl. 1.,l. (Myb.) Also A she-camel that is made to affect, with another he-camel, one young one, so that both yield their milk to it, and to which the people of a tent, or house, confine themuelves ex- clusieely of the other for the purpose of milking her: (p:) or a she-camel that is choen as the one more abundant in mills, when one has brought A-j forth and her young one is drawn away ( .) a soon as born, before ae smells it, and the young one of another, that has brought forth before her, is brought near to her, and she affects it; the other is left to suckle the young one, and is termed o., pl. J [app. . or L; (As, TA:) or a she-camel that is eft, or lft alone, to be miled: (s:) or that affects a young one [not hAr ow], or is destitute of her young one, (JK, M, ],) whether she incline to another's young one or do not, or that is dstitute of her young onm by death or slaughter, (M, TA,) and mAcoe milk one cause to flow by means of the young one of another; but only by her affecting a young one, and not suclding it: (M, :*) or tha brings forth, when abundant in milk, and has hlr young one drawn (~) from beneath her, and another put beneath her, and is then left, or left amne, to be milked; (Lb, g(;) this being done because of her generous quality: (Lh:) or a she-camel, or two she-camels, to which the people of a tent, or house, confine them- mlves exclusively, for milking, rhaen two or three she-camels are made to affect one young one, and to yield their milk to it; the young one [after- wards] sucking from one of them only: (g,* TA:) or a she-camel that brings forth, and wVhose young one is drawn away (j.) in order that her milk may continue for their use, she being made to yield Aer milk by means of the young one of another, which is then withdrawn from her, and she is milked: sometimes, also, they bring together three and four 'jL [pl. of 3iA.] to one young camel: and the doing so is termed '~: (IAr, TA:) in this case they take as a t1 whichever of them they will. (ISh, TA.) [Ap- plied to a she-camel in any of these senses, it seems to be an epithet in which the quality of a subt. is predominant; i. e., used without its having ijU prefixed to it.] - See also the para- graph next following, in two places. $i. [as fem. of the epithet ': see the next preceding paragraph, and the places there referred to in its first sentence. . As a subst. it signifies] A'great sip: (T, S, ! :) or a ship that goes of itte(f, witAhout its being made to do so by the sailor: (JK, :) or one that is followed by a mall boat: (X :) the first held by Az to be the right meaning: (TA:) pl. Q.1ii. (JK, .)_ Also, (, Mgh, Myb, ], &c.,) and *uk&, (JK, Myb, j,) The habitation (~,) of bees, [whether it be a manufactured hive or a hollow in the trunk of a tree or in a roch,] in which thy d~voit thir Aoey; (Q ;) the place in wich b deposit their honey: (Mgh:) or the tAing in whAich b~e deposit thir ho~ y, (Q, TA,) not manufactured for them: (TA:) or a thing like the [kind of jar calld] :l, of clay, (, TA,) made for bees: (TA:) or a certoin thing for bee, wll known, of clay or of wood: (MNb:) or, accord. to Lth, if made of clay, it is called tj1j, (M,b, TA,) i. e. [;1 and ;sb and j 1 #] with kesr: (Mb :) or a piec of wood hoUo~d out for honey to be deposited therein [by bes]: or the lower part of a tree that is caUled ;., [n. un. of.;*, q. v., hoUomed out for that pur- pose,] rewmbling the [kind of jar called] Jj;: A - J1.0~~~~~ a (]:) or , signifies the part of the ;Ijl_ which i the place of the honey: (JK:) pl. as above. (Mqb, TA.) 33.": see the next paragraph. QJ;. Empty, vacant, void, devoid, deatitute, or unoccupied; (Mgh, TA;) having none, and nothing, in it: (T A :) applied to a place, (Mtb, TA,) s also , (TA) and tj.L; (Mtb;) and to a thing, as abo *t ; (TA;) or a vesel. (Mgh.) You say also * 64. X 01, [as well as o'"; alone,] meaning A place in which is none (1, TA) and nothing. (TA.) And ;.,j ,"..; i; .ll, meaning a'l. [i.e. I found tlh house empty, &c.]. (TA.).j Vacant, or free; from a thing or an affair; or devoid, or destitute, of a thing; (TA;) and so 'V and ; which last is the same as masc. and fern., though it has i. also for fem., and ,'.1 for pl.; (];) but properly, accord. to Lb, it has no dual form, nor pl., nor fem., though some give it such forms: (TA:) or a , which hasu a dual, [i. e. e.Lj,] and pl., (S, Msb,) i. e. s and :. l1, (v,) signifies free [from a thing]; or clear or quit [of a thing or person]; as also t $.", (S, Msb,) which, being [originally] all inf. n., has no dual nor pl. [nor fem.]; ( ;) and .I a - t;LL. (M,b.) You say, & ' e t . ' il _.'.l and t., i. e. Thou art free from tAis' thing, or ffair. (TA.) And A. 1 ' A.j us, meaning J%t. [i.e. I am free from anxiety]. (Mgh.) ind Ij 'X t; l li, meaning j& ec . I am free from ~uch a thing]: (s:) and , a, and a,*; and some say, ot1A tb, and _.&,., which is not proper. (T, TA.) And ,e . .. .. s :; ,.F t. 1 . ,-r Thou art free in mind from my affliction, or mirfortune. (TA from a trad.) And L, t~ Uil I am clear, or quit, of thee. (Q.) ind o°;.3 . l l signifies the same. (S.) And '. i . '_ and :W1l [q. v.] We are clear, or quit, of you. (Fr, T in art. W.) And . C>$ Tho U . art clear, or quit, of this affair. (TA.) And with r t ;w to S h i tjafar Us [lit. l am, With respect to this affair, like Fdli Ibn-XI,a. 1
1

U, · 2005-11-27 · BoOK 1. the latter pmt of the next paragrph.]) Also An empty, a mcant, a void, or an no~ cupied, pace. (XKL. [s ee o . ) [In the present day, it is often applied

Mar 17, 2020

Download

Documents

dariahiddleston
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: U, · 2005-11-27 · BoOK 1. the latter pmt of the next paragrph.]) Also An empty, a mcant, a void, or an no~ cupied, pace. (XKL. [s ee o . ) [In the present day, it is often applied

BoOK 1.

the latter pmt of the next paragrph.]) Also An empty, a mcant, a void, or an no~

cupied, pace. (XKL. ee [s o . ) [In thepresent day, it is often applied to A clot to whicon nrtirefor privacy; and particularly to a cellfor religiou retirement: and is vulgarly pro-

nounced 4L.] You ay, oa Ui --- `

(°) or , i p. t.~- (g) [He hada ameeting,or an intrview, witl him in a wacant place, ora place unoccupied by others, i. e., in a privateplace]. Also EacA of the two sharp sides oredges of an arrow-head (Aon, JK, TA) or of aspear-head: (Agn, TA :) both together are calledthe 5;.;; (Aln, JK, TA.)

g is primarily an inf. n. (MF, TA. [See 1,first sentence.]) -[Then it is used as an epithet,syn. with JIA:] ee Qa., in five places.l Thenit i used (as a subbt. ib the sense of vacantplace [in a general ene]: (MF,TA:) or aplace in which i afotAing: ($, ]:) [often appliedin the present day to; any opm tract of countryor desert:] and then, particuarly, such as onetake for the p~ s qf satig a want of

nature; (MF, TA;) i. q. U, (C, Mhb,,)but not aJ meaning only a place for the perform-

ance of .~ 1, as might be imagined from this

explanation: pl. asl. (MF, TA.) It is said in

a prov., (S,Meyd,) St;.i J ,Ji; ,j.d, (u ,Meyd, g,) [in Freytag's Arab. Prov., (i. 436,)JAtt4,] i. c. [Thy place of retirement is] mot

pre~rative (.)f) [of tAy se of shame, ormodesty]; meaning it is most fit for thee to bealone in thine abode; (s,* Meyd;) for he whois so needs not to be careful for his shame, ormodesty: it is used in blaming the mixing withothers. (Meyd.) ; - -. _ [His place ofretirement for satisfying o want of nature wasstraitened to himn] is used as meaning he sufferedsuppression of the feces, or constipation of the

bowel. (Ibn-Buzurj, TA in art. em..) m t

fA~JI '1, (TA,) or [as written in a verse inwhich it occurs in the TA in the present art., andin art. I rJ] .JI, (JK, TA,) [without,., butwhether this be the right reading, or only re-quired by poetice license, seems to be doubtful,]is a phrase mentioned by Th, (TA,) meaningVerily Ae is good in speech. (JK, TA. [If theformer reading be right, the meaning may besimilar to that of tjL>1 _, mentioned above:if the latter only, or rather l ,.J 1 J1, beright, it probably belongs to art. kl, and is

tropical, from the herbage termed lib.; and thismay also be the cue if the former reading beright])

Igd; and its fem. m.: ee J1i., in twelveplace. -The fem., also signifies applied to ashe-camel, (?, Mlb,) Loosed from the cord, orrope, with which her fore shanh and her armhatm ben bound together, (?, Mqb, j,) and ftalo, or free, (Q,) so that he patures where thewill. (Mqb.) Hence, (Mqb,) it is used by wayof metonymy a meaning Divorced: (L4, C,

M,b, ] :) one sys to a woman, h ou; To

art di;orced; (Lb, ;) and thu a man used tosay in the Time of Ignorance: (TA:) and one

says, s. ' She is divorced: (Mb :) and a

woman is divorced thereby when divorce is meant(Lb, TA.) Applied to a woman, it signifies also

Free from any obstacle to marriage: pl. 1.,l.(Myb.) Also A she-camel that is made toaffect, with another he-camel, one young one, sothat both yield their milk to it, and to which thepeople of a tent, or house, confine themuelves ex-clusieely of the other for the purpose of milkingher: (p:) or a she-camel that is choen as theone more abundant in mills, when one has brought

A-jforth and her young one is drawn away ( .)a soon as born, before ae smells it, and theyoung one of another, that has brought forthbefore her, is brought near to her, and she affectsit; the other is left to suckle the young one, andis termed o., pl. J [app. . or L;(As, TA:) or a she-camel that is eft, or lftalone, to be miled: (s:) or that affects a youngone [not hAr ow], or is destitute of her youngone, (JK, M, ],) whether she incline to another'syoung one or do not, or that is dstitute of heryoung onm by death or slaughter, (M, TA,) andmAcoe milk one cause to flow by means of theyoung one of another; but only by her affectinga young one, and not suclding it: (M, :*) ortha brings forth, when abundant in milk, and

has hlr young one drawn (~) from beneathher, and another put beneath her, and is thenleft, or left amne, to be milked; (Lb, g(;) thisbeing done because of her generous quality:(Lh:) or a she-camel, or two she-camels, towhich the people of a tent, or house, confine them-

mlves exclusively, for milking, rhaen two or threeshe-camels are made to affect one young one, andto yield their milk to it; the young one [after-wards] sucking from one of them only: (g,*TA:) or a she-camel that brings forth, and wVhose

young one is drawn away (j.) in order thather milk may continue for their use, she beingmade to yield Aer milk by means of the young oneof another, which is then withdrawn from her,and she is milked: sometimes, also, they bring

together three and four 'jL [pl. of 3iA.] to one

young camel: and the doing so is termed '~:

(IAr, TA:) in this case they take as a t1whichever of them they will. (ISh, TA.) [Ap-plied to a she-camel in any of these senses, itseems to be an epithet in which the quality of asubt. is predominant; i. e., used without its

having ijU prefixed to it.] - See also the para-graph next following, in two places.

$i. [as fem. of the epithet ': see the nextpreceding paragraph, and the places there referredto in its first sentence. . As a subst. it signifies]A'great sip: (T, S, ! :) or a ship that goes ofitte(f, witAhout its being made to do so by thesailor: (JK, :) or one that is followed by amall boat: (X :) the first held by Az to be theright meaning: (TA:) pl. Q.1ii. (JK, .)_

Also, (, Mgh, Myb, ], &c.,) and *uk&, (JK,Myb, j,) The habitation (~,) of bees, [whetherit be a manufactured hive or a hollow in the

trunk of a tree or in a roch,] in which thyd~voit thir Aoey; (Q ;) the place in wich bdeposit their honey: (Mgh:) or the tAing inwhAich b~e deposit thir ho~ y, (Q, TA,) notmanufactured for them: (TA:) or a thing likethe [kind of jar calld] :l, of clay, (, TA,)made for bees: (TA:) or a certoin thing forbee, wll known, of clay or of wood: (MNb:) or,accord. to Lth, if made of clay, it is called tj1j,

(M,b, TA,) i. e. [;1 and ;sb and j 1 #]with kesr: (Mb :) or a piec of wood hoUo~dout for honey to be deposited therein [by bes]:or the lower part of a tree that is caUled ;.,[n. un. of.;*, q. v., hoUomed out for that pur-

pose,] rewmbling the [kind of jar called] Jj;:A - J1.0~~~~~ a

(]:) or , signifies the part of the ;Ijl_which i the place of the honey: (JK:) pl. asabove. (Mqb, TA.)

33.": see the next paragraph.

QJ;. Empty, vacant, void, devoid, deatitute, orunoccupied; (Mgh, TA;) having none, andnothing, in it: (T A :) applied to a place, (Mtb,

TA,) s also , (TA) and tj.L; (Mtb;)

and to a thing, as abo *t ; (TA;) or a

vesel. (Mgh.) You say also * 64. X 01, [aswell as o'"; alone,] meaning A place in which is

none (1, TA) and nothing. (TA.) And ;.,j

,"..; i; .ll, meaning a'l. [i.e. I found tlhhouse empty, &c.]. (TA.).j Vacant, or free;from a thing or an affair; or devoid, or destitute,

of a thing; (TA;) and so 'V and ;which last is the same as masc. and fern., though

it has i. also for fem., and ,'.1 for pl.; (];)but properly, accord. to Lb, it has no dual form,nor pl., nor fem., though some give it such

forms: (TA:) or a , which hasu a dual, [i. e.

e.Lj,] and pl., (S, Msb,) i. e. s and

:. l1, (v,) signifies free [from a thing]; orclear or quit [of a thing or person]; as alsot $.", (S, Msb,) which, being [originally] allinf. n., has no dual nor pl. [nor fem.]; ( ;) and.I a -t;LL. (M,b.) You say, & ' e t .' il

_.'.l and t., i. e. Thou art free from tAis'

thing, or ffair. (TA.) And A. 1 ' A.j us,meaning J%t. [i.e. I am free from anxiety].

(Mgh.) ind Ij 'X t; l li, meaning j&ec . I am free from ~uch a thing]: (s:) and

, a, and a,*; and some say, ot1A tb,and _.&,., which is not proper. (T, TA.) And

,e . .. .. s:; ,.F t. 1 . ,-r Thou art free in mind

from my affliction, or mirfortune. (TA from a

trad.) And L, t~ Uil I am clear, or quit,

of thee. (Q.) ind o°;.3 . l l signifies the

same. (S.) And '. i . '_ and :W1l[q. v.] We are clear, or quit, of you. (Fr, T in

art. W.) And . C>$ Tho U . 7°

art clear, or quit, of this affair. (TA.) And

with r t ;w to S h i tjafar Us [lit. l am,

With respect to this affair, like Fdli Ibn-XI,a.

1